ZetaTalk: Thug Controlwritten July 3, 2004

Does the Sudan sound like a microcosm of what the Zetas said the elite had in their plans for selective groups? For those who don't
believe it could happen today, this should serve as a warning that the right circumstances merely need to be present for it to happen
anywhere.

We have stated that the Sudan would degenerates into territorial battles among the starving, after the pole shift, and due to the lack of media attention paid to the
starving in the Sudan, this situation has emerged early. Given that starvation will be rampant after the shift, is this a scenario that will be repeated around the world,
the strong starving the weak? There are significant differences in the support a bully gets in the present day to what will be available after the shift, in this scenario as
well as others.

We have stated that one reason Service-to-Self groups loot until they deplete supplies and then die out is that they fail to plan, fail to cooperate with each other,
and require continuing supplies to feed their gangs. What will happen after the shift, and how does this differ from today in, for instance, the Sudan. Today,
deliberate genocide, death by starvation with outright theft of livestock, is being done, but what does this require from the outside world? Guns, ammunition, and
food aid that can be stolen. The gangs are sustained by mountains of food stuffs delivered to the area, and via bribery or coercion, landing in the hands of the thugs
rather than the starving. Not a new story. After the shift, no such deliveries will be made, and ammunition runs out. The Service-to-Self are known to demand
immediate satisfaction of their wants, and plan and cooperate poorly, thus will eat the livestock stolen so the stock is not available to breed, and then turn on each
other. Where travel is difficult, as it will be everywhere after the shift, isolated villages will not be raided, and the thugs, likewise isolated, decimate themselves, each
trying to be the survivor at the expense of the others. In the Sudan, without sacks of grain and regular deliveries of ammunition, the villages would turn on their
oppressors.

Brutality, genocide, and virtual slavery in economically depressed areas - all exist today because somewhere in the world food is being grown, products are being
manufactured, and commerce flows. The pole shift brings an abrupt halt to that. All travel is impeded, fuel runs short so that even a means as flexible as the
helicopter comes to a halt. Manufactured parts for maintenance are lacking, and the broken link effect sets in, machinery abandoned and rusting in disuse. What is
missing from the picture also is the big fist, the arm of the oppressor that comes in with the big guns to establish control. Africa before colonization was tribal, and
feuds were balanced. The Americas before immigration to the new world was likewise tribal, minor feuds the only issues. What Africa and the Americas
experienced was the big fist from Europe, machine guns, cannons, conscripts required to fight or be shot so the big fist included armies and navies that had no
choice but to be brutal, upon command. Remove the big fist, and oppressed people soon set matters right. The oppressor is killed in the night, savagery returned in
kind, Iraq with the rage against the occupation an example of the seething that turns savage with opportunity. When weapons, ammunition, supper, and backup
called in readily are missing, the bullies, the oppressors, are slaughtered. This also is a story that is not new.

Eventually, survivor groups that remain are hard at work, all growing or catching their food and cooperating heavily with each other. The occasional lone thug is
encountered and either runs for his life to live in the woods on his own, with survival very iffy, or is killed attempting to loot the hard working group. A group that is
keeping starvation at bay by intense cooperation and careful planning recognizes instantly those that are doing likewise, and also recognizes instantly a group that
has survived by looting. There are a thousand clues. Since the looters are increasingly finding themselves without and turning on each other, they are themselves
malnourished, poorly coordinated and weakened, and blinded by rage over not having what they want, when they want it. In a battle with survivor groups that look
out for each other, the thugs are easily picked off, and decimated further. In today's world, such vigilante justice brings harsh penalties, imprisonment, due to laws
designed to keep the thugs off the streets but also due to the fear among those in control that their slave class, the working class, might rebel. But after the shift, with
police and the military absent, phones dead, and determination of who the criminal and the victim are clear, standing back and letting the criminal have his way is
not the option that is taken. Imagine trials where the victims of crimes determine the sentence, and you see the future of Service-to-Self gangs looting survivor
groups.

There is farmable land outside the camp, but food cannot be gathered because
militiamen on horseback, clad in government uniforms, roam the scrubby
landscape. Assault rifles are balanced on their laps, and whips hang from their
belt loops. More than a million people live in the camps, many of which lack
water, supplies and sanitation, and operate without any feeding centers. Tensions
have simmered since the 1970s, when drought and competition over scarce
resources sparked clashes between largely nomadic cattle and camel herders.
Human rights and aid groups accuse the government of carrying out an ethnic
cleansing campaign. Aid workers predict that many more people will die, and
that the U.N. World Food Program will be able to reach only 800,000 of the 1.2
million displaced people because of continuing violence. The government has also restricted access to humanitarian workers and
journalists, granting travel permits infrequently and allowing only a small part of the affected areas to be visited. A trip down a
dirt track road exposed a war zone where gunmen roamed. Sun-burned men rode on camels, guns saddled on their laps, just steps
from Mornay camp. One held a whip. Others herded hundreds of sheep, cattle and camels, smiling and waving as visitors passed,
animals that aid workers and the displaced people in the camp said were stolen. Rapes and attacks continue around the edges of
the camp every night, women there said, as they rocked sickly babies with hollow eyes.